On Sunday 02 January 2005 09:58, Benjamin Rossen wrote: > Hello David > > Here are some things you could try. > First: > Open KDE Control Center > Index > Appearance & Themes > Fonts > select anti-aliasing This had no visible effect. > Try changing the fonts you use. If the font does not show scalable sizes, > or only three or four sizes, it is a but mapped, not a ttf. ttf = true type > font. A true type font is defined with vector graphics, and is in principle > infinately scalable. Bit mapped fonts are little image files, and do not > scale very well, and anti-aliasing is usually not possible to implement. > Some graphics can make a kind of anti-aliasing by blurring the image, but > the result is not very satisfactory, and it is questionable whether this > improves the readability. I am currently using a scalable font, it appears, and I have changed the font being used. > Second: > Open KDE Control Center > Index > Internet & Network > Web Browser > Fonts > Try changing these fonts. Make sure that you select ttf fonts. > Also, if you find that the font renderings are too small for you (this may > be a function of your monitor; I have 1600 x 1200 which creates this > problem) then you can also adjust the default font sizes here. This shall > save you having to use the Increase Font Size button of Ctrl + + keyboard > shortcut. I'm need to solve this in the general desktop form. Dialogs and menus are just too hard to use. > Pardon me if I am saying things you already understand well. This is where > I am at. Indeed, I was not able to solve this problem in Mandrake 10.1, > which finally forced me to go back to my Red Hat distibution to do my work. > Perhaps you can get to the bottom of this. I think it is a bug in the > Mandrake distribution. The graphic user interface desktops should not use > the bit mapped fonts by default. I do not know enough to solve the problem. I understand the basics of tont technology. It's KDE and X that I'm not so savy about. I've got Gentoo, so either it's not the *same* problem, or it's a KDE problem that doesn't manifest in RH. > > I hope this has been helpful, > > Benjamin Rossen > www.amiculus.com > > On Thursday 30 December 2004 13:57, David Corbin wrote: > > I'm running KDE 3.3.1. Despite having set the fonts to use in the > > control center, most KDE applications show another (tiny) font for my > > menu. Other applications (Eclipse, Mozilla, etc.) show the fonts I've > > selected in the control center. > > > > Any ideas on how to correct this? > > > > David > > ___________________________________________________ > > . > > Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. > > Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. > > More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html. > > ___________________________________________________ > . > Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. > Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. > More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html. ___________________________________________________ . Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.